It was your fault, the installer did precisely what you told it to, it asked you where you wanted to install the game and, not unreasonably like every other software installation I've seen, it assumes to location you tell it to use can be cleared down.Was anyone else as furious as I was to find the game install offers a choice of Hard drive to install to, but then simply wipes the contents of your hard drive with no warning. When I contacted the company they offered me 7 days free game to to 'compensate' me, all but said it was my fault, but that it was a real problem they are going to fix
Wrong!Programming lesson 1: Your installer/uninstaller should *always* only delete files it created. Never blindly delete a whole folder/path:(
I see a bright, albeit short future for you in software development!fromtesonlineb16_ESO wrote: »Wrong!
At installation time there is no history to use, the installer is perfectly at liberty to do precisely what you tell it to do, if you specify C:\ as the installation directory it's fine if the installer wipes it .. YOU TOLD IT TO.
Sure, UNINSTALLERs should only remove stuff the INSTALLER created but the installer is asking for a directory and every installer I've ever used expect this to be usable as it likes.
This happened to me too. ESO is such a pig it filled up my C:// and wouldn't patch any more. 250GB drive with ESO and the OS on it and nothing else. I installed it to my second hard drive, and it wrote over EVERYTHING. And I do mean, EVERYTHING.
fromtesonlineb16_ESO wrote: »It was your fault, the installer did precisely what you told it to, it asked you where you wanted to install the game and, not unreasonably like every other software installation I've seen, it assumes to location you tell it to use can be cleared down.Was anyone else as furious as I was to find the game install offers a choice of Hard drive to install to, but then simply wipes the contents of your hard drive with no warning. When I contacted the company they offered me 7 days free game to to 'compensate' me, all but said it was my fault, but that it was a real problem they are going to fix
As usual, when you choose to depart from the default it's up to you to make sure you know what you're doing, READ carefully the default to understand the what the installer is going to do and ensure the path you enter conforms to that.
That's not an option that everyone can choose, data retrieval services can be a bit on the costly side. I'm sure that's something which Zenimax wouldn't be prepared to pay for either, even though it's due to their installer!I've seen too many posts where people say this happens. It's scary. I would bring your hard drives to a professional to retrieve your data.
They need to fix this!